Showing posts with label VIDEO GAMES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VIDEO GAMES. Show all posts

You Can Now Play Pokémon Go In Your Apple Watch

Pokémon Go players with an Apple Watch will now be able to scout for nearby creatures and grab items from Pokéstops without reaching for their phone.

The launch comes more than three months after Apple and game developer Niantic Labs revealed the game would be coming to the smartwatch, and follows recent speculation that Niantic Labs had shelved plans for the Apple Watch version of Pokémon Go.




The game is now fully compatible with the Apple Watch, according to an announcement posted by the game's official website on Thursday.


When playing Pokémon Go on the Apple Watch, gamers will be able to log a Pokémon-hunting session as a workout, giving players a way to count that movement toward their daily fitness goals, according to the game's website. Any steps logged with the Apple Watch will also bring players closer to hatching their eggs, which usually require gamers to walk a certain distance in order to get a new critter emerge.

HMD announces the return of a months Nokia Games

The Finnish company "HMD Global" owner of the rights proclaimed brand compatriot "Nokia" for a single return of the most famous games that are famous for their Nokia phones, and it comes to a game of "Snake" which Odmnha end of the nineties generation and the beginning of the two thousandth, where will this game in a new form on the platform Facebook Messenger.

Famous game Snake "Snake" will become available a new design, but the same seventh on the platform Facebook Instant Games on the application of chat and Instant Messenger Facebook, where friends will be able to play on this platform and challenge each other formula.

HMD Global company and indicate that, as in the previous version will be for users to move the snake in this game in order to devour the points of insects and apple fruit, which means that the challenge will grow greater the number of points and the more become the size of the snake larger, will be in front of the users six stages to play and three speeds at the option of users.

HMD Global company also confirmed that the new version of the game Snake will be available as well as a new version of the phone "Nokia 3310".

Review: The Legend of Zelda


Scrambling across the idyllic vistas of Nintendo’s vast new fantasy sandbox The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, it’s easy to watch the action-adventure’s sunken structures plaintive artifacts of a vanished golden age waiting to be restored





Breath of the Wild, a $59 action-adventure game that launches with the Nintendo Switch on March 3 (it's also available for Wii U), has the makings of a masterful captain. Exploring its expansive collage of verdant, gelid and sun scorched zones is akin to tromping onto the set of a painterly Studio Ghibli film. An experience so simultaneously prodigious and accomplished that it feels like a mind-blowing mic drop to the sort of "open world" games (Grand Theft Auto V, The Elder Scrolls, The Witcher 3) the industry seems bent on proliferating.


In the game, you play once more as the franchise’s sandy haired paragon, toiling to thwart nefarious forces, team up with the eponymous princess and revitalize a slumbering civilization. In reality, a company so iconic its name still works as a metonym for “video games,” is reeling from rejection of its last console, the bold but confusing and now beleaguered Wii U. The upcoming Switch console, meanwhile, represents Nintendo’s years-in-the-offing gambit to right the ship—and just maybe steam ahead toward terrain of the sort once held by the company’s disruptive WII.

Review: The Nintendo System


The most important thing to know about Nintendo Switch is, drum roll please, that there's surprisingly little to know at this point. It is on one level simply what it claims to be: a respectably powerful $299 TV games console you can buy . that also transforms into a handheld gaming powerhouse.



Not literally. There are no bending limbs or hidden robot heads lurking beneath its VIVID cap-acitive multitouch 720p screen. You simply pull the rectangular slate— book-ended by a pair of motion control sticks capable of advanced haptic feedback Nintendo calls Joy-Cons—from its U-shaped dock.



As a handheld, the Switch feels respectably rigid and durable, an unostentatious but good carbon-black slate that’s like a blue collar version of an Apple product. At roughly the same weight as an iPad mini (about 300 grams), it's compact enough to make playing games comfy. If your hands get tired in this mode, you can slide the Joy Cons up and off , prop the Switch on a flat surface with its rear kickstand, then continue playing wirelessly, your hands free to roam like creatures loosed from cages.